OSHA-compliant jobsite sanitation. Reliable weekly servicing, handwashing stations, and documentation that keeps your project inspection-ready.
OSHA 1926.51 sets the floor for jobsite sanitation. The regulation specifies minimum facility ratios, requires handwashing capability, and mandates sanitary maintenance throughout the project. The general contractor carries compliance exposure if any of those requirements break down during an inspection.
The gap between contract compliance and on-site compliance is wider than most superintendents realize. A site can be properly equipped at mobilization and non-compliant at month four because servicing fell behind, handwashing went unrestocked, or crew expansion outpaced the unit count. The original quote no longer matches the conditions on the ground.
My Can runs construction service in Austin as scheduled contracts with documented service intervals, not as one-off drops with informal servicing. The operational standard is that your superintendent should never need to call about a missed service.
Core construction unit. Heavy-duty polyethylene shell engineered for daily field use. Recessed handles for placement near gang boxes or laydown areas. Lockable door for after-hours security. Ventilation sized for warm-weather operation. Unit counts follow OSHA 1926.51 ratios based on actual crew size including subcontractors.
OSHA requires handwashing capability alongside toilet facilities. Hand sanitizer in the porta potty doesn't meet the strict interpretation. We provide separate handwashing stations with foot-pump operation, fresh water reservoirs, soap, and paper towels — restocked on the same service interval as the toilet units.
Contractors with three or more active sites across Austin get consolidated service: one master agreement, one monthly invoice, one account contact. Adds, removes, and frequency changes happen by email or phone without paperwork delays.
Jobsites running second shift, weekend crews, or 24-hour operations need servicing intervals adjusted to use levels. We move to twice-weekly or three-times-weekly servicing based on actual demand rather than calendar defaults.
Project start moved up. Original supplier didn't deliver. Crew arriving Monday and you have no restrooms on site. We carry buffer construction inventory for fast-turnaround starts in Austin. Same-day or next-day mobilization is achievable in most situations.
Multi-month or multi-year projects get structured as fixed-asset arrangements. Units stay for the duration. Servicing runs on a scheduled rotation. Documentation is provided for audit or compliance review. Unit count and frequency adjust through standing change-order language.
Project details, crew size, duration, and access constraints.
Coordinated delivery with superintendent.
Fixed day, full cleaning & restocking.
Fast response to crew growth.
Scheduled pickup and final invoice.
UV-stabilized polyethylene, recessed handles, lockable doors, and skid bases for easy relocation.
Independent water supply, soap, towels — serviced on the same schedule as toilets.
Fully accessible for federally funded and public projects.
"We haven't had a missed service since... basic reliability — they show up when scheduled."
— Howard Brennan, Site Superintendent
"Good response. Would work with them again."
— Linda Vasquez, Project Manager
"I don't have to actively manage the restroom service... That's the whole product."
— Garrett Whitfield, General Contractor
OSHA 1926.51 requires at least one toilet for crews up to 20 workers. Above 20, the ratio scales — generally one toilet seat plus one urinal per 40 workers. Handwashing capability is required alongside toilet facilities. We size your unit count and service frequency against current OSHA standards for Austin jobsites.
Talk to a coordinator who's run construction work before. My Can quotes jobsites against actual crew size, real project duration, and your specific site access conditions.
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